123 x 173 cm
Cluster Illusion examines the brain’s tendency to recognize a pattern as something abstract. Rather than seeing the distinct dots of which the images are composed, our brains turn these dots into illusory clouds. This series is a study of human vision and a commentary on the human urge to find shapes and patterns in anything, giving coherence to the whole. Thus, the relationship between the part and the whole, in other words, between the local and the global, and between nature and culture is on display in Cluster Illusion. This work can also be read as a representation of the debate on climate change and the anthropocene, whereby human impact on nature is either an illusion or a scientific fact. Here we note that the work depicts sunlight shining through clouds, which appears almost photographic. However, one can also see how each image is composed of a meticulous Japanese pattern. Combining ancient traditions and modern techniques, this work also blends the historic with the contemporary. The smooth character of silk draws the viewer close to the surface, a surface that is rather optical and tactile, so that one can observe how almost photographic images turn into abstract patterns. Each silk piece (123.00 x 173.00cm) is handmade by a Tokyo-based kimono dyer, following the traditional kimono technique.
Scientific research, high and mass culture, and the processes of cultural production in contemporary society plays an important role in the work of Rotterdam-born artist Melvin Moti, currently based in Rotterdam and in Berlin. The artist whose practice traverses films, books, objects and drawing, enquires into the power of human imagination and abstraction, looking at how perception works neurologically and psychologically. His earlier works include a guided tour in the empty rooms of the Hermitage through memory ( No Show , 2004), the human ability to make images appear on the retina from total darkness ( The Prisoner’s Cinema , 2008) or the representation of the fourth dimension ( The Eightfold Dot , 2013). The artist gives form to obscure anecdotes, incidents, and individuals — or, what he calls black holes — that he claims haven’t been contextualized by official history. Concerned with history and its influence in cultural production, Moti researched the Cosmists, an early twentieth century Russian group of thinkers responsible for Cosmism, the philosophical and cultural movement that combined occult and esoteric theories with space science. By comparing statistics, scientist and member of the Cosmists, Alexander Chizhevsky, discovered a correlation between solar activity (such as sunspots) and major historical events on earth (such as wars, revolutions, epidemics and natural disasters). In several studies Chizhevsky describes how one can observe an increase in wars, revolutions, and in epidemics on earth during years of high amounts of solar activity, while years with a low amount of solar activity correspond to a decrease of military and political events on earth. Chizevsky called this observed synchrony “historiometry”. While studying this history, Moti produced two works in 2015, a film Cosmism and a series of silk works, Cluster Illusion .
“The Prisoner’s Cinema” is a phenomenon described in neurology as a hallucination, that appears after a prolonged absence of visual sensations...
Learn How to Draw Realistic Portraits in This Online Class Home / Classes / Academy Discover the Secrets of Drawing Realistic Portraits (Now on Pre-Sale!) By Jessica Stewart on December 5, 2023 Have you ever seen a realistic portrait and wished that you knew how to create something similar? Thanks to My Modern Met Academy's new course, Realistic Portrait Drawing Made Easy , you'll discover all the tips, tricks, and techniques to produce a portrait that looks incredibly real...
Anne Deguelle — L’Arctique fantôme — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Anne Deguelle — L’Arctique fantôme — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Anne Deguelle — L’Arctique fantôme Exhibition Photography Upcoming Anne Deguelle, Glacier, 2014, 40 × 53 cm © Adagp, Paris, 2023 Anne Deguelle L’Arctique fantôme In about 2 months: January 27 → February 17, 2024 vernissage le 27.01.24, 17h → 21h exposition du 27.01 → 17.02.2024 L’ahah #Moret 24-26, rue Moret, 75011 Paris L’ahah est heureuse de présenter cet hiver en L’ahah #Moret une série singulière de photographies dans l’œuvre de l’artiste Anne Deguelle ...
“The Prisoner’s Cinema” is a phenomenon described in neurology as a hallucination, that appears after a prolonged absence of visual sensations...
Invited in 2007 to the Museum Folkwang in Essen (Germany), Simon Starling questioned its history: known for its collections and particularly for its early engagement in favor of modern art (including the acquisition and exhibition of works by Cézanne, Gauguin, Van Gogh, Matisse), then destroyed during the Second World War, the museum was pillaged for its masterpieces of ‘degenerate art’ by the nazis...
These two large format untitled paintings by James Collins feature the artist’s hallmark technique, which transforms abstraction into an optical illusion that creates dimension, space, and mass...
The three cut-outs are made of three aerial photographs coming from the archives of the Ecuadorian Military Geographic Institute...
Kwan Sheung Chi’s work One Million is a video work depicting the counting of bills...